Erectile issue impacts men of all races, and there is with more energetic men starting now having ED. Aging is no longer directly associated with the onset of erectile dysfunction as believed by many. The sexual disorder is in actuality giving a huge impact in a man’s life, and being able to lose manhood untimely is amazingly troublesome and debilitating. To overcome ED problems and help men find their solution to improving their manhood, scientists have developed drugs that will make the lives of ED patients more manageable.

Vardenafil HCl is basically the generic version of the brand Levitra, thus it is sometimes called generic Levitra. Vardenafil HCl is a drug whose mode of action is to allow men with sexual impotence to get a momentary erection so they will be able to have successful sex with their partners. Medical professional consider vardenafil HCl to be safer than the popular ED drug Viagra because you will less likely encounter any visual changes while one vardenafil HCl. In fact, vardenafil is very safe that it can even be used by people with conditions or diseases like diabetes, prostate cancer, hypertension, liver and kidney diseases, multiple sclerosis, and Parkinson’s disease. Despite this, it cannot be said that vardenafil HCl is not without any side effects.Read more…

Turner Draws His Walk to Work

I’ve long been a sucker for the comics, which I never quite outgrew. Thanks to artists like Lynda Barry, Dan Clowes, Marjane Satrapi, and Art Spiegelman, who helped give the graphic novel staying power, it’s still cool to be a comics freak well beyond your adolescence. This week, I discovered a strip that indulges my interest in dark, irreverent comics as well as my pro-pedestrian inclinations: Jason Turner’s Walk to Work.

Each of Turner’s short strips is a story about his pedestrian journey to work—and the strange sights he encounters en route. There’s a naked guy; a guy in a red shirt; a disappearing puddle of vomit; and a brilliant game. He makes unsettling eye contact with an eagle, and converses with a crow near a polluted river (“the river is heavy with death”). In this and many of the strips, Turner even tackles “the idea of green.” (In this particular strip, he consults a shrub that’s subject to exhaust fumes all day long.)